Down the Rabbit Hole: A Large-Scale Survey of Psychedelic Users’ Patterns of Use and Perceived Effects

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs  – January 29, 2025

Source: OpenAlex

Summary

A survey of 1,486 US adults (67.1% male) provides crucial insights into the evolving landscape of psychedelics and drug studies. Predominantly, people use MDMA and LSD recreationally, often orally. While acute effects like hallucinations and positive mood are common, residual headaches also occur. This psychology research offers a valuable scale for understanding public experiences with these chemical synthesis alkaloids. Deciphering this complex data helps us navigate the rabbit hole of diverse academic research themes surrounding psychedelics.

Abstract

The ever-changing landscape surrounding legality and accessibility of psychedelics and their increasing popularity make it imperative to better understand the nature of psychedelic use by the general population. To this end, 1,486 eligible respondents (Mage = 29.58, 67.1% male) residing in the United States completed an online survey designed to assess the types of psychedelics used, methods of administration and dosing, frequency of use, intentions for use, context/environments in which they are used, perceived acute effects, frequency of those effects and distress about them, and their perceived residual effects and distress about them. Respondents predominantly endorsed using MDMA, LSD, DMT, and psilocybin. The predominant methods of administration were oral. Most reported using psychedelics for recreational purposes. The most endorsed acute effects were hallucinations, increased heart rate, positive mood, and visual tracers, while the most endorsed residual effects were headaches/migraine, dry mouth, nausea, hallucinations, and anxiety. Participants were most distressed by negative mood states, vomiting, and nausea when under the acute effects of psychedelics, but mean distress ratings were low. These results can help inform clinical trials, reform policy regarding legal access to psychedelics, and track changes in these metrics as sociocultural and legal landscapes continue to shift.

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